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Criminal Law Act 1967
Ch. 5815

Sch 2.

previously convicted) may be tried on indictment otherwise than at his own instance.

9. Section 4 of the 1870 c. 23.Forfeiture Act 1870 (which allows a court on a person’s conviction for felony to award compensation not exceeding £100 for loss of property occasioned by the felony) shall have effect as if the references to felony included any offence tried on indictment, as if the reference to loss of property included damage to property, but did not include loss or damage due to an accident arising out of the presence of a motor vehicle on a road, and as if the reference to £100 were a reference to £400; and section 34 of the 1952 c. 55.Magistrates’ Courts Act 1952 (which confers the same powers on a magistrates court) shall have effect accordingly, but with the substitution for the word “felony” of the words “an indictable offence”.

10. In section 23 of the 1893 c. 5.Regimental Debts Act 1893 (which applies the provisions of that Act as to the collection and disposal of the effects of a deceased serviceman to the case of a serviceman convicted by a civil court of felony) for the words “or is convicted by a civil court of any offence which by the law of England is felony” there shall be substituted the words “or, in consequence of a conviction by or before a court of ordinary criminal jurisdiction, is sentenced to death or is imprisoned or detained to serve a sentence of three months or more”.

11. In section 66 of the 1894 c. 60.Merchant Shipping Act 1894 (which makes forgery etc. of certain documents under Part I of that Act felony, but without specifying any punishment) there shall be added at the end the words “and liable on conviction on indictment to imprisonment for not more than seven years”.

12—(1) In the 1916 c. 50.Larceny Act 1916, in sections 24 to 28 (sacrilege, burglary, housebreaking and possession by night of implements of housebreaking etc.), for the expression “felony wherever it occurs otherwise than in the phrase “shall be guilty of felony”, there shall be substituted the expression “arrestable offence”; and the same substitution shall be made in section 29(2)(b) (procuring execution etc. of valuable security by accusation of certain crimes).

(2) A person guilty of any offence under section 33(1) of the Larceny Act 1916 (receiving) shall be liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding fourteen years; but—

(a) in the 1914 c. 59.
1926 c. 7.
Bankruptcy Act 1914, in section 154(3) (which was added by the Bankruptcy Amendment Act 1926, and in certain cases makes a person receiving property fraudulently disposed of by a bankrupt liable to the same punishment as a receiver of property obtained by a misdemeanour), for the words following the word “liable” there shall be substituted the words “on conviction on indictment to imprisonment for not more than seven years or on summary conviction to imprisonment for a term not exceeding six months or to a fine not exceeding a hundred pounds or to both”; and